Pronunciation: /kənˈkætəˌneɪt/
noun a series of things connected or linked together
A1 I learned how to concatenate strings in my beginner English class.
A2 The teacher explained how to concatenate words to form longer sentences.
B1 The programmer used concatenation to combine multiple variables into one string.
B2 She demonstrated how to concatenate arrays to create a new data structure.
C1 The expert coder employed sophisticated algorithms to efficiently concatenate large datasets.
C2 The software engineer developed a custom function to concatenate complex data structures with ease.
verb to link (things) together in a chain or series
A1 I concatenate the strings 'hello' and 'world' to create the word 'helloworld'.
A2 In Excel, you can concatenate cells by using the '&' symbol.
B1 The software developer needs to concatenate multiple data fields to generate a comprehensive report.
B2 To merge the two data sets, we need to concatenate them using a specific algorithm.
C1 The programmer wrote a script to concatenate all the files in the directory into a single document.
C2 As a data analyst, I often concatenate large datasets to extract meaningful insights.
formal In computer programming, to concatenate means to link together or join two or more strings.
informal I need to concatenate these two lists of names before sending out the email.
slang Let's concatenate these videos to make a cool compilation.
figurative The artist was able to concatenate different art styles in their masterpiece.
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